![]() I'd argue that the same thing happened to Undertale, a 2015 game put out by Toby Fox and lovingly styled after Japanese role-playing games ("JRPGs") like Earthbound. The subtleties are replaced with one joke repeated ad nauseum until the words don't even seem like words anymore. Inundated with so much garbage, it becomes easy to forgot why you liked the game in the first place. (See: your fave is problematic)įor example, you: 1) play Portal 2) think: "Oh man, this game is awesome " and 3) decide to do a quick Google search about the game and BLAM, suddenly you're neck deep in "The Cake is a Lie" jokes that go on forever and ever. ![]() And it makes sense: the internet is vast and deep and, ultimately, if you stare into the void, something unpleasant will come bubbling to the surface. This has the same steadfast reliability to it as Rule 34 (the invented-but nonetheless utterly true-idea that, if something exists, there is smut dedicated to it). ![]() It's the truism of our time: the internet will find a way to ruin everything you like.
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